stories and illustrations from the Victorian era of the lives of the folks who lived in Weymouth, Portland and the surrounding area.

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Cannasue, my love of Weymouth and Portland.

I live in the little traditional seaside town of Weymouth in the county of Dorset.

Having lived here pretty much the whole of my life, only ever having moved away twice… I missed it so much that I swore I would never leave again.

Every time I crest the ancient Ridgeway I breathe a sigh of relief,

I’m home.

The wondrous sight of Weymouth and Portland nestled in its protective basin below me makes my heart swell with pride.

I AM proud of my home town, we have so much to be thankful for on our doorstep.

It’s part of the World Heritage Jurassic Coastline

We have a stunning silky soft sandy beach, historic and vibrant harbour, the rugged beauty of Portland nearby and surrounding picture perfect countryside.

These all come with their own long, and fascinating history, from invading Anglo Saxons to fierce bloody battles of the Civil War.

Having a passion for history, I love nothing better than trawling through old books and newspapers, finding stories of past residents. Those same streets that my Victorian ancestors walked through, the quaint old shops my long past relatives frequented, what their friends and relatives got up to, good and bad!

In the process I have also managed to gather in a whole collection of Victorian books that contain thousands of beautiful illustrations…not quite sure what I’m going to do with all those though!

Consequently I’m making a start on here by combining the two.

Never having blogged (is that such a word?) before, and with nothing but a (very) hasty introduction by my youngest to the world of blogging…here I go!

I live and learn.

Hope someone passes by and enjoy the tales.

Sue xxx

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27 comments on “Cannasue, my love of Weymouth and Portland.”

Here you are, I am passing…thanks for the like on my own post which featured Weymouth. Have to say I was quite surprised by the place in a positive way. The nephews loved the beach as did The Hound. MM🍀

Hi Sue, Would you contribute some of your memories or photos to a history project that is collecting stories of our everyday leisure activities?

Volunteers are our recording oral history interviews and creating a new archive that will be housed at Dorset History Centre so that future generations can discover the views and feelings of ordinary people through the descriptive accounts of their experience. And selected stories will be included in an exhibition at Dorset County Museum in March 2014. http://www.freetimeourstories.org.uk

Hi Sue,
I love Weymouth, and I love stories of old so its no susrprise that I find your blog wonderful.
I’ve researched a lot of my family history and have found a story or two to tell there too, none in Weymouth I’m sorry to say, but some really juicy gossipy ones. 🙂
Looking forward to reading more of yours. 🙂

Hi Sue! Was fascinated to read your story relating to my Gt Gt Grandfather, Alfred Dennis’s drapers shop in Weymouth (1895 Wheeling and dealing …). If you come across any more articles relating to him I would love to read them. I believe he was Mayor of Weymouth or a town councillor at some point. He died in 1938 aged 99.
Thank you and best wishes, Ann

Hello, I love looking into my family history and have been looking into my Great Great Grandfather’s sister ..Lady Emily Groves. Our family have a lovely collection of photographs and her letters written from Rodwell Villa , Weymouth to her brother Teddy here in New Zealand. Have you ever come across any stories of the Groves family? Does Rodwell Villa still exist? Weymouth looks lovely…and I am keen to see more of your posts…thanks Lee

Hello Sue and Lee,
I am also interested in the Groves family, as i have been researching Rosina Groves, John Groves’ first wife (she was Rosina Kerslake before her marriage).
I would love a copy of the family photo, even though Rosina is no longer there, but her children are and they were first cousins to my husband’s grandfather.
I would also like a copy of the photo of Rodwell House or brochure when it was a hotel. Is it possible to purchase any of it?
I would be very grateful for any more information.
Thank you very much in advance.
Christine Tett (Oxfordshire)

Hi Christine,
Sorry I’ve been a while getting back to you. I’ll ask the lady who gave me permission to use the photo if I can mail you a copy,
I’ll also see if I can dig out a photo of the Rodwell House for you.
Might take a few days as my kids and grandkids are all descending on us for Carnival week and it tends to be somewhat chaotic to say the least!.
Sue

Hi Christine, I am happy to share the lovely pic and I do have some others …Ernest etc..if you are interested as well as Sir John and his children when they were younger….I know the family still remained close after Rosina’s death as they are with Aunt Anne Kerslake on the 1871 census at Nottington and one letter Emily talks about Mabel (her daughter) staying with Anne and contracting whooping cough from children staying there……..Lee (New Zealand)

Hi,
My great, great Grandfather’s sister was Lady Emily Groves (nee Dods) ….we have letters and family pics from their corrrspondence… she had one brother in America and one in New Zealand (my ancestor)…Lee
If you look at the article on Sydney Hall … you will see one of our pics of the Groves family

Hi again Lee,
My apologies if you’ve read the above link looking for your relative…got the two brewing families mixed up! I’m presently working on the Devenish line and their links to the Sidney Hall….will still keep a look out for your family. What dates do you have for Lady Emily?

Hotel. Late C18 or early C19. Flemish bond brickwork, cream to
front wall, red on left gable, and painted to right gable,
slate roofs.
An elegant front range to a parapet and with 2 transverse
hipped roofs; at the rear are 2 conjoined lower wings,
probably contemporary with the main range.
EXTERIOR: 3 storeys, 4 windows; 9-pane above 15-pane above
12-pane sashes, all with thin glazing bars and painted plain
reveals, under splayed brick voussoirs and with stone sills.
The openings to bay 3 are blind, above a 6-panel door with
radial fanlight. A broad plat band between ground and first
floors, and a moulded stone cornice with brick blocking and
stone parapet. There are no stacks visible.
The right gable end, which has a central gable peak, has three
12-pane sashes, one of these lighting a staircase, and the
attached wing has 2 similar sashes at each of its 2 floors.
The left gable has one 15-pane sash at first floor, and a
lean-to glazed timber conservatory.
The rear wing, with concrete tile roof, has two 9-pane above
12-pane sashes.
INTERIOR: not inspected.
The building stands rather isolated, but is one of a small
group of remaining earlier properties in this part of Rodwell
Road. ‘

If you like I can send an exterior photo of it as a hotel from a 60’s holiday brochure. Just mail me your email address.

Thank you very much for that information. I would love to see the brochure! My email is amoake@snap.net.nz I have looked through my scans of Emily’s letters to see if she describes Weymouth….but she mostly talks about how ill the family is …influenza must have spread through Weymouth around 1900…this family and especially Sir John seemed to have very bad health! I can show you the family photos we have of them . One in particular of the whole family is lovely – including Sidney ( Sidney Hall named after him) if you would like to see it. Emily married the widower in 1875… Her maiden name was Dods …and she was born in Spalding, Lincolnshire. I don’t know how she met John. She lived the rest of her life in Weymouth at Blackdown House ( now Chipmunks) ….thanks again …Lee

Hi Rebekah,
Do you mean the picture of the men at their lessons(sat on the benches)?
I have a collection of Victorian and Edwardian books that contain some fascinating articles and illustrations.
The pictures that went along with the article isn’t specifically Portland prison, I chose it because it represented what I was talking about.
Hope this helps.
Sue

Hi Sue,
Your site has been quite a find, as I am (much to my surprise) seeking information about nineteenth-century Weymouth and Melcombe Regis. However, I’m seeking some information from a slightly pre-Victorian era, specifically, what year Stacie’s Hotel opened for business. Have you any idea? If not, can you direct me to a resource? Thanks so much.

I think I have quite a few notes on Stacie’s, and a couple of illustrations somewhere.
When do you need them by? I am fairly tied up for the next few days, then have the family descending for Christmas, but if of any use to you, I will attempt to look them out after that. It depends how in-depth and what sort of thing you’re looking for, I think local historian and writer Maureen Attwooll mentions it in a couple of her books.
Sue

Hi Sue,
I am in exactly the same boat with regard to the next few days and the Christmas swarm, so time is not of the essence. I will be delighted to get any information whenever you get around to it. I’d be glad simply of the date Stacie’s opened, but ultimately, what I really need is the name of the most elegant lodging in Weymouth/Melcombe Regis in 1831. If you have any ideas, I’d be thrilled.

Thanks so much for the effort you have put into this blog. My RODWELL ancestors came from Salisbury Wiltshire, not too far away from Weymouth. Of course, Rodwell is the name of the Trail, the pub, road, and disused train station. I would be very interested if you could supply or refer me to any history on the Rodwell name in Weymouth. For example, who was the prominet Rodwell so many things were named after?

Seems the name arises from the type of place where your ancestors once lived rather than an actual person.

A quick peek into our local historian Maureen Attwooll’s book “The Bumper Book of Weymouth” reveals the answer which I had sort of suspected, but wasn’t certain of.

RODWELL as a place name dates back to the 17th c and is thought to indicate ‘a reedy spring or stream,’ derived from the old words ‘hreod’ and ‘wells.’ The development of Rodwell (Weymouth), began in the first half of the 19th c, with large houses being built along Longhill Road, (today’s Rodwell Road).

Rodwell Road runs from the lofty Wyke Ridge down to the present day harbour, so presumably at one time it was in fact a ‘reedy stream.’

On Ancestry “English, (chiefly East Anglian):apparently a habitational name from an unidentified place, perhaps named with the Old English personal name Hroda (see Rodney),+ Old English well (a) ‘spring’ ‘stream.”